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Size: 150 x 90 cm
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Weight: Approx. 3.5 kg
Function: Wall-mounted painting for modern interiors, creative spaces, or curated collections
In “Maelstrom,” Helena Detsch captures the silent tension of a world in flux. Soft yet restless, the composition draws from the swirling mass of plastic waste as seen by a diver from below — reinterpreted through flowing acrylics into something unexpectedly beautiful.
This is not just abstraction for its own sake. It’s a visual meditation on how we perceive pollution, translated into calm turbulence — a color field that shifts between the organic and the artificial. The longer you look, the more the layers speak: fragments of forms, echoes of water, memory of movement.
Eco-art with emotional depth, “Maelstrom” stands as a quiet but insistent reminder of the fragile systems we live within — and the art that can emerge from awareness.
Size: 150 x 90 cm
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Weight: Approx. 3.5 kg
Function: Wall-mounted painting for modern interiors, creative spaces, or curated collections
In “Maelstrom,” Helena Detsch captures the silent tension of a world in flux. Soft yet restless, the composition draws from the swirling mass of plastic waste as seen by a diver from below — reinterpreted through flowing acrylics into something unexpectedly beautiful.
This is not just abstraction for its own sake. It’s a visual meditation on how we perceive pollution, translated into calm turbulence — a color field that shifts between the organic and the artificial. The longer you look, the more the layers speak: fragments of forms, echoes of water, memory of movement.
Eco-art with emotional depth, “Maelstrom” stands as a quiet but insistent reminder of the fragile systems we live within — and the art that can emerge from awareness.
Size: 150 x 90 cm
Medium: Acrylic on canvas
Weight: Approx. 3.5 kg
Function: Wall-mounted painting for modern interiors, creative spaces, or curated collections
In “Maelstrom,” Helena Detsch captures the silent tension of a world in flux. Soft yet restless, the composition draws from the swirling mass of plastic waste as seen by a diver from below — reinterpreted through flowing acrylics into something unexpectedly beautiful.
This is not just abstraction for its own sake. It’s a visual meditation on how we perceive pollution, translated into calm turbulence — a color field that shifts between the organic and the artificial. The longer you look, the more the layers speak: fragments of forms, echoes of water, memory of movement.
Eco-art with emotional depth, “Maelstrom” stands as a quiet but insistent reminder of the fragile systems we live within — and the art that can emerge from awareness.

